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Faulty Sources Isikoff & MSM previously used: Karen Kwiatkowski & Patrick Lang
NRO and Iraq News ^ | 5-17-05 | Michael Rubin

Posted on 05/19/2005 5:55:33 AM PDT by Matchett-PI

Two items:

[1] From Laurie Mylroie's "Iraq News" Newsletter - Tue, 17 May 2005 20:03:39 -0400

Subject: Michael Rubin, Prior Isikoff Use of Faulty Source

From the list of Michael Rubin, previously at DoD and now at AEI (May 17, 2005):

This was not the first time Michael Isikoff has used faulty or fabricated sources.

In reporting the myth that Doug Feith’s office created its own intelligence unit, he relied on Karen Kwiatkowski, who associated with the Lyndon LaRouche movement.

Kwiatkowski said on tape that she was Isikoff’s chief source.

The Senate Select Committee on Intelligence’s Report on the U.S. Intelligence Community’s Prewar Intelligence Assessments on Iraq interviewed Kwiatkowski based on her press statements and found that she could not give a single example to back up any of her allegations.

Simply put, she had never been to the unit she described nor as a Morocco desk officer, had she attended any Iraq planning meetings. But Isikoff accepted her word without criticism and without asking the basic questions an investigative reporter should.

(pp.282-283 accessible at: http://a257.g.akamaitech.net/7/257/2422/13jul20041400/www.gpoaccess.gov/serialset/creports/pdf/s108-301/sec9.pdf)

Isikoff was more interested in badmouthing the Pentagon than in evaluating his sources. His editors allowed him to get away with it because it was fashionable to badmouth Feith and the Bush administration.

Now people are dead. Not only Isikoff, but his editors should resign over his pattern of fabrication. - Michael Rubin

Laurie Mylroie email: sam11@erols.com

*

[2] From National Review On Line May 19, 2004, 8:44 a.m.

You Must be Likud! - Anti-Jewish rhetoric infects the West by Michael Rubin NRO Contributor

[snip]

ANONYMOUS SOURCES

Sources remain anonymous when they have something to hide, or when they do not have the courage to speak their convictions outright.

The records of frequent anonymous intelligence and defense sources give cause to doubt.

Former Defense Intelligence Agency analyst Patrick Lang, for example, has argued that Likud controls America. He told associates that Undersecretary of Policy Douglas Feith sought to make the Middle East safe for Jews by a process of "de-Arabization."

Several journalists have relied on Lang as a source as did television networks that used him as an analyst.

Most did not mention that, in the run-up to the war in Iraq, Lang was a registered agent of a foreign government.

Karen Kwiatkowski, a former Pentagon official, is another anonymous source who has used a cloak of anonymity to peddle falsehoods.

Her writing betrays her bias and fringe ideology. She has claimed, for example, that there was a "neo-conservative coup" within the Pentagon and that officials strove to build a "greater Zion."

Kwiatkowski has bragged that she was the anonymous source for exposes by The New Yorker's Seymour Hersh, Newsweek's Michael Isikoff, and for Knight-Ridder's Washington bureau.

She claimed insight into events and offices in which she has no first-hand knowledge.

Much of what Kwiatkowski told these publications was innuendo or outright fabrication. [snip]

Michael Rubin - a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute (formerly at the DOD). http://www.nationalreview.com/rubin/rubin200405190844.asp


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Editorial; Extended News; Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; Government; News/Current Events; War on Terror
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"Most did not mention that, in the run-up to the war in Iraq, [Patrick] Lang was a registered agent of a foreign government."

"Karen Kwiatkowski, who associated with the Lyndon LaRouche movement. .. Her writing betrays her bias and fringe ideology. She has claimed, for example, that there was a "neo-conservative coup" within the Pentagon and that officials strove to build a "greater Zion."

1 posted on 05/19/2005 5:55:37 AM PDT by Matchett-PI
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To: Matchett-PI

People like Isokoff are to lazy to really check things out to make sure they are true. They just sit at their desk and make things up to fullfill their biased agenda.


2 posted on 05/19/2005 6:00:08 AM PDT by Piquaboy (22 year veteran of the Army, Air Force and Navy, Pray for all our military .)
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To: oldglory; MinuteGal; JulieRNR21; mcmuffin; gonzo; sheikdetailfeather; Web Offset; Bob J; Hannity; ..
"Now people are dead. Not only Isikoff, but his editors should resign over his pattern of fabrication." - Michael Rubin
3 posted on 05/19/2005 6:00:17 AM PDT by Matchett-PI (The difference between ignorant and stupid is that stupid isn't curable.)
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'NEWSWEEK DISSEMBLED, MUSLIMS DISMEMBERED!'
Yahoo News ^ | 5/18/2005 | Ann Coulter
Posted on 05/18/2005 7:19:07 PM EDT by Dan Evans
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1405980/posts

When ace reporter Michael Isikoff had the scoop of the decade, a thoroughly sourced story about the president of the United States having an affair with an intern and then pressuring her to lie about it under oath, Newsweek decided not to run the story. Matt Drudge scooped Newsweek, followed by The Washington Post.

When Isikoff had a detailed account of Kathleen Willey's nasty sexual encounter with the president in the Oval Office, backed up with eyewitness and documentary evidence, Newsweek decided not to run it. Again, Matt Drudge got the story.

When Isikoff was the first with detailed reporting on Paula Jones' accusations against a sitting president, Isikoff's then-employer The Washington Post -- which owns Newsweek -- decided not to run it. The American Spectator got the story, followed by the Los Angeles Times.

So apparently it's possible for Michael Isikoff to have a story that actually is true, but for his editors not to run it.

Why no pause for reflection when Isikoff had a story about American interrogators at Guantanamo flushing the Quran down the toilet?

Why not sit on this story for, say, even half as long as NBC News sat on Lisa Meyers' highly credible account of Bill Clinton raping Juanita Broaddrick?

Newsweek seems to have very different responses to the same reporter's scoops. Who's deciding which of Isikoff's stories to run and which to hold? I note that the ones that Matt Drudge runs have turned out to be more accurate -- and interesting! -- than the ones Newsweek runs. Maybe Newsweek should start running everything past Matt Drudge.

Somehow Newsweek missed the story a few weeks ago about Saudi Arabia arresting 40 Christians for "trying to spread their poisonous religious beliefs."

But give the American media a story about American interrogators defacing the Quran, and journalists are so appalled there's no time for fact-checking -- before they dash off to see the latest exhibition of "Piss Christ."

Assistant Managing Editor Evan Thomas justified Newsweek's decision to run the incendiary anti-U.S. story about the Quran, saying that "similar reports from released detainees" had already run in the foreign press -- "and in the Arab news agency al-Jazeera."

Is there an adult on the editorial board of Newsweek?

Al-Jazeera also broadcast a TV miniseries last year based on the "Protocols of the Elders Of Zion." (I didn't see it, but I hear James Brolin was great!) Al-Jazeera has run programs on the intriguing question, "Is Zionism worse than Nazism?" (Take a wild guess where the consensus was on this one.)

It runs viewer comments about Jews being descended from pigs and apes. How about that for a Newsweek cover story, Evan? You're covered -- al-Jazeera has already run similar reports!

Ironically, among the reasons Newsweek gave for killing Isikoff's Lewinsky bombshell was that Evan Thomas was worried someone might get hurt. It seems that Lewinsky could be heard on tape saying that if the story came out, "I'll (expletive) kill myself."

But Newsweek couldn't wait a moment to run a story that predictably ginned up Islamic savages into murderous riots in
Afghanistan, leaving hundreds injured and 16 dead. Who could have seen that coming?

These are people who stone rape victims to death because the family "honor" has been violated and who fly planes into American skyscrapers because -- wait, why did they do that again?

Come to think of it, I'm not sure it's entirely fair to hold Newsweek responsible for inciting violence among people who view ancient Buddhist statues as outrageous provocation -- though I was really looking forward to finally agreeing with Islamic loonies about something.

(Bumper sticker idea for liberals: News magazines don't kill people, Muslims do.) But then I wouldn't have sat on the story of the decade because of the empty threats of a drama queen gas-bagging with her friend on the telephone between spoonfuls of Haagen-Dazs.

No matter how I look at it, I can't grasp the editorial judgment that kills Isikoff's stories about a sitting president molesting the help and obstructing justice, while running Isikoff's not particularly newsworthy (or well-sourced) story about Americans desecrating a Quran at Guantanamo.

Even if it were true, why not sit on it? There are a lot of reasons the media withhold even true facts from readers. These include:

A drama queen nitwit exclaimed she'd kill herself. (Evan Thomas' reason for holding the Lewinsky story.)

The need for "more independent reporting." (Newsweek President Richard Smith explaining why Newsweek sat on the Lewinsky story even though the magazine had Lewinsky on tape describing the affair.)

"We were in Havana." (ABC president David Westin explaining why "Nightline" held the Lewinsky story.)

Unavailable for comment. (Michael Oreskes, New York Times Washington bureau chief, in response to why, the day The Washington Post ran the Lewinsky story, the Times ran a staged photo of Clinton meeting with the Israeli president on its front page.)

Protecting the privacy of an alleged rape victim even when the accusation turns out to be false.

Protecting an accused rapist even when the accusation turns out to be true if the perp is a Democratic president most journalists voted for.

Protecting a reporter's source. How about the media adding to the list of reasons not to run a news item: "Protecting the national interest"?

If journalists don't like the ring of that, how about this one: "Protecting ourselves before the American people rise up and lynch us for our relentless anti-American stories."


4 posted on 05/19/2005 6:02:23 AM PDT by Matchett-PI (The difference between ignorant and stupid is that stupid isn't curable.)
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To: Matchett-PI

"Most did not mention that, in the run-up to the war in Iraq, [Patrick] Lang was a registered agent of a foreign government."

Most? How about none? I was always leary of this guy Lang whenever CNN or PBS used him as an expert analyst leading up to and during the Iraq invasion. His views seemed at odds with the other "experts" and he always had a snotty "these guys don't know what they're doing" attitude.


5 posted on 05/19/2005 6:04:41 AM PDT by MNnice
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To: Matchett-PI

Bttt...


6 posted on 05/19/2005 6:04:47 AM PDT by tubebender (We child proofed our house but they still get in...)
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To: Piquaboy

"People like Isokoff are to lazy to really check things out to make sure they are true. They just sit at their desk and make things up to fullfill their biased agenda." ~ Piquaboy

Exactly! Perfect example:

Advance Copy of Newsweek! NOT AGAIN!
RegisteredMedia ^ | 05-19-05 | RegisteredMedia
Posted on 05/19/2005 12:55:50 AM EDT by Registered
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1406140/posts


7 posted on 05/19/2005 6:11:12 AM PDT by Matchett-PI (The difference between ignorant and stupid is that stupid isn't curable.)
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To: Matchett-PI
Karen Kwiatkowski, who associated with the Lyndon LaRouche movement

I have seen this mentioned several times with regards to Kwiatkowski, but I have never seen anyone offer any evidence supporting this contention.

8 posted on 05/19/2005 6:30:06 AM PDT by Nicholas Conradin (If you are not disquieted by "One nation under God," try "One nation under Allah.")
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To: Piquaboy

Exactly.....


9 posted on 05/19/2005 6:39:21 AM PDT by marty60
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To: MNnice
"I was always leary of this guy Lang whenever CNN or PBS used him as an expert analyst leading up to and during the Iraq invasion. His views seemed at odds with the other "experts" and he always had a snotty "these guys don't know what they're doing" attitude."

Let's not forget that you're talking about the same vacuous opportunists who voted for sKerry and think that Michael Moore, et.al., ad nauseum, are credible sources for truthful information. bttt

Patrick Lang was a registered foreign agent in the run-up to the Iraq war - link here

10 posted on 05/19/2005 6:40:30 AM PDT by Matchett-PI (The difference between ignorant and stupid is that stupid isn't curable.)
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To: Matchett-PI

"Now people are dead. Not only Isikoff, but his editors should resign over his pattern of fabrication."

Or perhaps be given an honorary subscription to the Lyndon LaRouche newsletter? I would contribute to that!

Getting shot or hung is way too clean for what should happen to these people. Without public stocks (the kind where your are locked up and exposed to public humiliation and an occasional rotten vegetable) other methods need to be found to adequately humiliate these people.


11 posted on 05/19/2005 7:19:45 AM PDT by SusaninOhio
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To: Matchett-PI

Karen Kwiatkowski is a regular columnist at LewRockwell.com. Scroll to "columnists" to see her archive file


12 posted on 05/19/2005 8:33:43 AM PDT by WayneLusvardi (Kwiatkowski a LewRockwellite)
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To: Nicholas Conradin

"Karen Kwiatkowski, who associated with the Lyndon LaRouche movement" ~ Matchett-PI

"I have seen this mentioned several times with regards to Kwiatkowski, but I have never seen anyone offer any evidence supporting this contention." ~ Nicholas Conradin

Here ya go - Excerpted from article below:

"..Upon her retirement, Kwiatkowski took her story to Jeff Steinberg, editor of the Executive Intelligence Review, the journal of Lyndon LaRouche's movement. http://www.larouchepub.com/

Pat Lang, former chief Middle East analyst at the Defense Intelligence Agency, circulated Kwiatkowski's deposition to Steinberg in a September 16, 2003, e-mail in which he carbon-copied, rather than blind carbon-copied his distribution list.

Among the recipients were prominent journalists and producers, scions of the alternative press, and a smattering of current and former intelligence analysts who often serve as sources in news analyses and articles.

Many journalists and pundits ignored the deposition, tainted as it was by innuendo and falsehood. LaRouche, after all, has both peddled the theory that Queen Elizabeth II is a drug dealer and that former Vice President Walter Mondale was a Soviet agent.

They dismissed Lang's endorsement that "Jeff Steinberg is a first rate scholar. I am not concerned with where he works." That a former high-ranking Defense Intelligence Agency official ­ one that is still welcomed to frequent lunches and meetings with former colleagues ­ appears to maintain close ties to members of the LaRouche organization is a separate issue.

The Steinberg memorandum of the Kwiatkowski conversation is a study in conspiracy and innuendo." ~ [snip]

Full article - NOTE the 2004 date (1 year ago):

May 18, 2004, 8:36 a.m.
Web of Conspiracies

False rumors go from fringe staff go mainstream-again and again.

On May 13, 2004, Senator Edward Kennedy berated Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz at the Senate Armed Services Committee, condemning "disaster after disaster" in U.S. Iraq policy. Well before the Abu Ghraib revelations, Kennedy has sought to transform Iraqi freedom from a philosophical and strategic issue into a partisan debate, without regard either to reality or result.

On April 6, Kennedy called Iraq "George Bush's Vietnam." On March 5, 2004, Senator Edward Kennedy, speaking before the Council on Foreign Relations, took the president to task for allegedly exaggerating the threat posed by Iraq: "The evidence so far leads to only one conclusion. What happened was not merely a failure of intelligence, but the result of manipulation and distortion of the intelligence and selective use of unreliable intelligence to justify a decision to go to war," Kennedy said.

Kennedy might practice what he preaches. The president relied on National Intelligence Estimates, the consensus documents agreed upon across the intelligence community.

While Central Intelligence Agency products may have less than ideal, the president acted in good faith with the tools at his disposal. The same cannot be said of Kennedy.

In his desire to bash Bush, Kennedy adopted a narrative with its origins in the organization of erstwhile presidential candidate Lyndon LaRouche.

THE ROOTS OF A CONSPIRACY

To support his attack on the president, Kennedy cites Lt. Col. Karen Kwiatkowski to make his claim that the Pentagon would "take a little bit of intelligence, cherry pick it, [and] make it sound much more exciting...." Kennedy describes Kwiatkowski as a "recently retired Air Force intelligence officer who served in the Pentagon during the buildup to the war."

Kwiatkowski did serve in the Pentagon prior to the war, as did I, as did approximately 23,000 others. But, Kwiatkowski was not involved in Iraq policy. Her reminiscences fall more into the realm of fiction than fact.

I worked in the Office of Special Plans (OSP), charged with some aspects of the Iraq portfolio. My job was that of any desk officer: Writing talking points for my superiors, analyzing reports, burying myself in details, and drafting replies to frequent letters from Congressmen John Dingell and Dennis Kucinich. I was a participant or a fly-on-the-wall at many postwar planning meetings and accompanying video teleconferences.

One person I never met was Kwiatkowski. This should not be a surprising. Kwiatkowski was an Africa specialist who was the point woman for issues relating to Morocco. Just as I never attended meetings relating to Western Sahara, Kwiatkowski was not involved in Iraq policy sessions.

Rather than an inside scoop, Kwiatkowski provided an ideological screed.

By her own admission, she started writing http://www.lewrockwell.com/kwiatkowski/kwiatkowski28.html Internet columns while still a Pentagon desk officer. But, she did not know many of the people about whom she wrote. The Office of Special Plans consisted of a small number of active duty military officers, reservists, and civilians; both Democrats and Republicans.

Kwiatkowski got ranks and services wrong. In rank-conscience corridors of the Pentagon and among military officers, such things do not happen.

Upon her retirement, Kwiatkowski took her story to Jeff Steinberg, editor of the http://www.larouchepub.com/ Executive Intelligence Review, the journal of Lyndon LaRouche's movement.

Pat Lang, former chief Middle East analyst at the Defense Intelligence Agency, circulated Kwiatkowski's deposition to Steinberg in a September 16, 2003, e-mail in which he carbon-copied, rather than blind carbon-copied his distribution list.

Among the recipients were prominent journalists and producers, scions of the alternative press, and a smattering of current and former intelligence analysts who often serve as sources in news analyses and articles.

Many journalists and pundits ignored the deposition, tainted as it was by innuendo and falsehood. LaRouche, after all, has both peddled the theory that Queen Elizabeth II is a drug dealer and that former Vice President Walter Mondale was a Soviet agent.

They dismissed Lang's endorsement that "Jeff Steinberg is a first rate scholar. I am not concerned with where he works." That a former high-ranking Defense Intelligence Agency official ­ one that is still welcomed to frequent lunches and meetings with former colleagues ­ appears to maintain close ties to members of the LaRouche organization is a separate issue.

The Steinberg memorandum of the Kwiatkowski conversation is a study in conspiracy and innuendo.

Based on Kwiatkowski's recollection that she bumped into a Fletcher School classmate of Deputy Undersecretary of Defense Bill Luti on the platform of the Pentagon Metro station, Steinberg speculates that there may be a wider Israeli conspiracy. After all, according to Steinberg, the Fletcher School was the "roost" of Uri Raanan, a former Israeli diplomat.

Jonathan Pollard, convicted of espionage, had attended the Fletcher School. Steinberg neglected to mention that Raanan taught at Tufts for two decades, is a renowned scholar of Russian politics, and currently directs Institute for the Study of Conflict, Ideology, and Policy at Boston University. Steinberg also omits that Pollard failed to matriculate from Tufts.

According to Steinberg, Kwiatkowski told him that the Office of Special Plans was a "propaganda" unit. "Each week, OSP produced an updated Power Point talking points [presentation] on why the US must go to war in Iraq," the Kwiatkowski-Steinberg memorandum relates.

Kwiatkowski should know better.

The Office of Special Plans did produce Power Point slides, but not for the purpose Kwiatkowski insists. Talking points are a standard way to provide information throughout the military. This is well-known to Air Force officers, who joke they log more Power Point time than flight hours.

The Iraq team produced Power Point slides on a variety of issues for a simple reason: Despite criticisms of unilateralism, http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2003/03/20030321-4.html there were 48 countries in the Coalition. We made slides available to Pentagon desk officers not proficient in Iraqi affairs. Many talking points were unclassified and restated U.S. policy as determined in the interagency process and presidential speeches. We updated the slides because policy is fluid and is dictated by events. For example, when the Bush administration decided to refer Iraq's compliance failures to the United Nations Security Council, we updated slides to incorporate United Nations timelines and deadlines.

In her expose to the LaRouche organization, the substance of which was later published http://www.amconmag.com/12_1_03/feature.html in The American Conservative magazine, Kwiatkowski alleged that there was a purge of desk officers within International Security Affairs. Not true.

Kwiatkowski may have been upset that some colleagues received promotions when she did not.

For example, Kwiatkowski implies that Larry Hanauer ceased being an Israel desk officer. But, he subsequently became special assistant to Jay Garner; that's a promotion, not a purge.

Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld grabbed another Kwiatkowski colleague to be his executive assistant.

New desk officers rotated in, many of whom had far better language ability and on-the-ground experience than Kwiatkowski.

Kwiatkowski prides herself on her expose of a "neoconservative coup." She explained this to the Executive Intelligence Review editor.

But, many of the people she alleged to be part of the Office of Special Plans, either worked in other Pentagon departments, or had long since retired from government.

The errors are not surprising. In the 18 months I served in Special Plans, she did not visit the office (which would also explain subsequent errors in relating the location of the office).

Progressing from the ridiculous to the sublime, the Kwiatkowski-Steinberg memorandum suggests that one staff member pretended to care for his wheelchair-bound wife in order to travel on undercover secret missions.

Unfortunately, Kennedy staff members took the LaRouche organization at its word, and dragged the career government employee in for questioning on this allegation.

In her conversation with Steinberg, Kwiatkowski chided colleagues for alleged violations of standard Pentagon procedure, and yet ironically got wrong such basics as the escort ratio between Pentagon employees and visitors.

FRINGE IDEOLOGY

Kwiatkowski has dishonored the U.S. military by using her Pentagon position to grandstand and legitimize fringe ideology.

Like LaRouche, she rails against imaginary conspiracies and questions the loyalty of government employees who happen to be Jewish.

While writing under the moniker "Deep Throat Returns," Kwiatkowski wrote, "The neocons must be squirming. Strategic placement of chickenhawks should have leveraged the full might and political resources of the United States to build greater Zion, resolve the Middle East, and award energy development contracts to all true believers."

That Kwiatkowski would refer to her direct supervisor, Bill Luti, as a "chickenhawk" is ridiculous.

Luti had a 26-year military career, including during the first Gulf War.

Likewise, former National Security Council member General Wayne Downing ­ and everyone who served under his command in places like Panama ­ may take issue with Kwiatkowski's allegations.

But to Kwiatkowski, facts do not matter. In subsequent essays, she alleged her colleagues were fighting for a "greater Zion" rather than for U.S. national security.

Kwiatkowski's extremism undermined her competence. Her enthusiasm for conspiracies was matched by a lack of focus on national security.

In a January 15, 2003, e-mail to a colleague, Kwiatkowski wrote that neither Osama bin Laden nor al Qaeda, let alone nuclear North Korea, posed "a serious threat" to the U.S. national security.

There is a place for debate in policy ­ and, within the Pentagon, debates are frequent and fierce. But, living in denial about the threat al Qaeda posed after the Pentagon itself was hit in a terrorist attack did not inspire confidence.

THE GROWTH OF CONSPIRACY

In normal times, Kwiatkowski might not have passed journalists' credibility threshold. But, with Internet information laundering and Lang's gatekeeping, she met a small number of ambitious journalists hungry for a scoop.

They did not source their material to LaRouche and, at times, did not source their material to Kwiatkowski, but nonetheless betrayed their source by repeating her errors.

I had a unique perspective as the LaRouche-Kwiatkowski conspiracy about my office grew.

I was first alerted to the various conspiracies by journalists who, having known me from my time in academia and think tanks, asked me to confirm theories which, in retrospect, probably originated with Kwiatkowski.

I said the allegations had little basis in reality. But a few journalists said they had an "inside source," and continued to pursue the conspiracies; several found their way into print, corroborated by sources like Lang and retired intelligence professionals like Vince Cannistraro, Ray McGovern, and Judith Yaphe on the Lang distribution list.

In April 2003, the LaRouche organization published a pamphlet entitled "Children of Satan." The pamphlet contained a Steinberg essay alleging that students of the late University of Chicago professor Leo Strauss had formed a secret "cabal" to drag the United States into war by falsifying evidence.

The following month, I returned from a meeting at the National Security Council to Special Plans' suite of offices on the first floor of the Pentagon (Kwiatkowski falsely wrote that we worked in the basement).

Several colleagues were pouring over a fax. Public Affairs had just brought it over, saying that a New Yorker fact checker had inquiries and that Seymour Hersh was planning an expose of our office. We answered his questions immediately.

Many of his statements were factually wrong and repeated Kwiatkowski's mistakes verbatim. But, when the article was posted on the Internet on May 5, 2003, Hersh had not incorporated any corrections; his article is rife with errors.

But, with the Pentagon leadership's decision to concentrate on work rather than on public relations, falsehoods transformed into conventional wisdom.

Take Hersh's opening sentence: "They call themselves, self-mockingly, the Cabal."

We had never called ourselves that, although we were aware that Lang (whom Hersh cites openly), Defense Intelligence Agency official Bruce Hardcastle, and some Central Intelligence Agency officials used the term to describe Jewish colleagues.

Before Hersh, it was The Washington Report for Middle Eastern Affairs which popularized the term "cabal" to describe certain Pentagon officials. The Washington Report is not a mainstream publication. Rather, it is a fringe magazine which has put in print theories such as that the Mossad was behind John F. Kennedy's assassination.

Robert Dreyfuss, contributing editor to The Nation, repeated many Kwiatkowski conspiracies as fact, in a series of article for The Nation, The American Prospect, and Mother Jones.

Ironically, until Dreyfuss pegged me as part of the conspiracy based on five weeks as a research associate at the American Enterprise Institute, no one in the Pentagon leadership knew me.

Dreyfuss and Jason Vest coauthored a cover story in the January-February 2004 issue of Mother Jones based largely on Kwiatkowski. "No investigators have come knocking," Kwiatkowski complains on the first page.

The authors accept Kwiatkowski uncritically, declaring, "In her hands, Kwiatkowski holds several pieces of the puzzle."

Accompanying the Mother Jones article was a wire diagram http://www.motherjones.com/news/feature/2004/01/12_400.html outlining the alleged conspiracy to falsify intelligence. Unfortunately, the diagram, like the article, is replete with basic errors of fact. Dreyfuss and Vest confuse portfolios, positions, and such basics as who was and was not a government official.

Colonel Bill Bruner, for example, was not Chalabi's handler. Chalabi did not have a set handler. I doubt Chalabi knows who Bruner is. He tended to not know the office administrators. It was Bruner's job to take notes when his superiors were absent from meetings, make sure his staff worked on deadline, and that our responses to congressional letters and Rumsfeld snowflakes were free of grammatical errors. Harold Rhode likewise did not leave the Pentagon, where he has served as a career employee under both Democratic and Republican administrations.

How did such basic errors make it into Mother Jones? Only the editors know.

But, neither Dreyfuss nor Vest sought to interview any member of Special Plans, nor did either apologize for their inaccuracy. Instead, the two journalists appear to have relied on interviews with Kwiatkowski, and those on the Lang list like Greg Thielmann, a former State Department Intelligence and Research official who was uninvolved in Iraq policy.

While the Office of Special Plans conspiracy had its origins in the LaRouche organization, writers like Hersh, Dreyfuss, and Vest, broke the stigma and mainstream newspapers like the Philadelphia Inquirer and Miami Herald began to run with the story.

The New York Times Magazine published an overview of prewar planning based almost exclusively on second-hand sources and a background briefing with State Department lawyer Tom Warrick, a Gore campaign donor, who also had a slash-and-burn track-record among colleagues and in the interagency process.

Allegations unchallenged by the administration became convention wisdom. Major columnists and correspondents from the New York Times and Washington Post repeated falsehoods, sometimes helped along by "unnamed State Department officials" seeking to score points in internecine battles.

A FAILURE OF LEADERSHIP

The tragedy of the Special Plans conspiracy is multifold. Journalists allowed themselves to be spun by a false source; fearful that doublesourcing might undermine their scoops, many journalists ignored basic fact-checking procedures.

The resulting revelations pleased a partisan audience but, in retrospect, soiled the reputations of numerous newsmagazines and newspapers.

Some editors may want to reexamine reporting to see whether they sourced stories to Kwiatkowski and Lang; the resulting stories were often little more accurate than those of the New York Times's Jayson Blair and USA Today's Jack Kelley.

Some academic pundits who have repeated the allegations of alternative journalists and "intelligence correspondents" may want to consider whether their sources were accurate, or were merely using them to wage ideological and policy battles.

Many Democrats and Republicans, whether opponents or proponents of the Bush administration's foreign policy, have engaged the executive branch on substantive issues of policy; they ask pertinent questions and professionally exercise oversight. It is a shame that some do not.

Senator Edward Kennedy, eager to score points in an election year, cast his lot with a disgruntled conspiracy theorist.

In doing so, he undermined tens of thousands of hardworking servicemen, not only at the Pentagon, but also in conflict zones across the world.

Kennedy has failed as a leader. Before senators speak, they should make sure their sourcing does not rely on Lyndon LaRouche's magazine.

The failure of leadership spreads wide. By failing to respond to falsehoods at their start, the Pentagon allowed a false conventional wisdom to develop. The Undersecretary of Defense for Policy and his deputy have failed repeatedly to defend their subordinates.

More troubling, though, is the reaction of some in the White House. Many in the National Security Council realize that conspiracies woven around prewar planning are untrue. But, rather than stand by principle, they have rewarded those responsible for malicious leaks and false confirmations by changing policy as a result of falsehood.

By succumbing to policy blackmail, the White House has ensured that the tactics of LaRouche and Kwiatkowski remain a factor in Washington policymaking for years to come. When the White House fails to stand by its men and women, it signals adversaries that they can target officials one by one. At the end, Bush will stand alone.

­Michael Rubin, an NRO contributor, is a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute.
http://www.nationalreview.com/rubin/rubin200405180836.asp


13 posted on 05/19/2005 8:48:04 AM PDT by Matchett-PI (The difference between ignorant and stupid is that stupid isn't curable.)
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To: WayneLusvardi; Nicholas Conradin; Piquaboy; MNnice; tubebender; marty60; SusaninOhio

"Karen Kwiatkowski is a regular columnist at LewRockwell.com. Scroll to "columnists" to see her archive file" ~ WayneLusvardi

Yes, I know. bttt See my post #13.

And her articles are linked from other kooky conspiracy-theory web sites, like "Neocon Watch" also: http://batr.net/neoconwatch/archives/2004_05_01_neoconswatch_archive.html

At LewRockwell.com, where she writes stuff like: US Stalks Iraq , Ron Paul and the Five Paulians, The Cheney-Bush Junta, Whom Would Jesus Bomb?, etc., which also links to her weekly column at "Military Week" http://militaryweek.com/ (whose editor is LeRoy Woodson, Jr.)

Kwiatkowski writes: "...I hear from my military readers that access to websites like LewRockwell.com and the LewRockwell blog is now blocked by military Internet systems. Big Internet providers, like AOL and Earthlink, have long been amenable to governmental electronic data drift nets. Yet these same companies seem curiously less tolerant of customer freedoms, as AOL’s and Earthlink’s recent blocking of subscriptions to Lew’s daily email may illustrate. "

On August 13, 2003, Kwiatkowski also wrote: "Frank Gaffney, President of the Center for Security Policy, describes people like me who have closely observed the politicization of intelligence leading up to the invasion of Iraq – and said something about it – as having divided loyalties. ...." http://www.lewrockwell.com/kwiatkowski/kwiatkowski33.html

Her weekly column at Lew Rockwell.com: http://www.lewrockwell.com/columnists.html
http://www.lewrockwell.com/kwiatkowski/kwiatkowski76.html


14 posted on 05/19/2005 9:00:18 AM PDT by Matchett-PI (The difference between ignorant and stupid is that stupid isn't curable.)
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To: Nicholas Conradin

More regarding the Kwiatkowski-LaRouche connection.

Note the 2004 date:

May 30, 2004 - Iraq Myths

"..All the stories about it appear to share a single source, Karen Kwiatkowski, a now-retired lieutenant colonel who worked in the Pentagon - but not in the OSP - on North Africa. So how would she know what went on there?

The answer she gave me was that she regularly had 'conversations in the hallway' with someone who did, an official called John Trigilio.

Trigilio denied any such conversations took place, saying neither he nor his colleagues ever met an INC defector.

Why would Kwiatkowski make it up? On the one hand, she has written for Pat Buchanan's extreme right-wing journal, the American Conservative, and described herself to me as a 'conservative anarchist'.

Meanwhile, her story first surfaced - with her name concealed - in a dubious outlet: the Executive Intelligence Review, a virulently anti-semitic magazine run by conspiracy theorist, Lyndon LaRouche.

Kwiatkowski told me she admired LaRouche's work and admitted giving his editor, Jeff Steinberg, an interview.

However, she also needed an echo chamber. She got one in Patrick Lang, former Middle East chief of the Defence Intelligence Agency, who supplied quotes endorsing her story.

He sent an email to several journalists, enclosing the transcript of the Kwiatkowski-Steinberg interview. 'Jeff Steinberg is a first-rate scholar,' Lang wrote. 'I am not concerned where he works.'

Lang popped up again, last week with the claim that he had learnt from his associates that Chalabi and his defectors were an Iranian intelligence scam, 'one of the most sophisticated and successful intelligence operations in history'.

I assume Lang, who is widely admired in Washington, would not knowingly disseminate inaccurate information. But it is possible his political beliefs may make him credulous.

The Pentagon, he said, had been seized by extremists, 'Zionist revisionists', whose goal was to 'de-Arabise' the Middle East. Ariel Sharon's Likud party had in effect directed America's invasion of Iraq, and the way to visualise Likud's power was as 'a steel barbell, with one ball in Israel and another in the Pentagon, among the neo-conservatives'.

It is, I suppose, interesting that such groups exist, if we can take Rose's word for it, but this is lunatic fringe stuff - Lyndon Larouche; the Likud party directing America's invasion of Iraq. The strongest language Rose manages about this is that it's "contentious", which seems a little understated.

It's certainly true though that there are hidden agendas within the media as far as Iraq is concerned. Take Rose himself:
Now, with the war fought and Iraq on the brink of catastrophe, does any of this matter? It does: for the propaganda battles continue to resonate politically. Disinformation helped to drag Britain and America into a war.

On the brink of catastrophe? Don't you just wish. And this line about disinformation dragging us into the war....wasn't there something about Saddam not complying with UN resolutions? Just a vague far-off memory now of course, as the media line hardens around the idea that the sole reason for war was that Tony lied to us about Saddam having WMDs ready to fire in 45 minutes.... ~ Mickey Hartley http://mickhartley.typepad.com/blog/2004/05/

*

The item excerpted below was paid for by the Vote For Lyndon LaRouche 2004 campaign: http://larouchein2004.net/index.html

Children of Satan II: The Beast-Men - The Return of the Beasts - by Jeffrey Steinberg
http://larouchein2004.net/pages/other/2004/040103cosarticle2.htm

Prologue: A Trail of Two Beasts

"....Lt. Col. Karen Kwiatkowski (USAF-ret.), who served for eight months under Luti at the NESA shop, confirmed that Luti made no secret of the fact that he was being tasked by “Scooter.” On at least one occasion at a staff meeting, Luti made extremely deprecating remarks about his ostensible boss, Under Secretary Feith, further underscoring that his actual boss was Vice President Cheney. ....

Lt. Col. Kwiatkowski, who was cited above, reported that in November or December 2002, she escorted another delegation of top Israeli military officials to private meetings in Feith's office. She noted that the Israelis knew precisely how to get from the Pentagon entrance to Feith's office suite, and one member of the group actually barged into Feith's private office. The delegation was specifically waved off from signing the guest register in Feith's office, even through new regulations, post-9/11, had made such sign-in mandatory.

She also reported that, when she arrived at the NESA office in the late spring of 2002, there were reports circulating among staffers that the unit was under investigation for passing classified material on to Israel. Three other high-ranking former U.S. intelligence officials confirmed this report. .....


15 posted on 05/19/2005 9:06:15 AM PDT by Matchett-PI (The difference between ignorant and stupid is that stupid isn't curable.)
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To: Matchett-PI
More regarding the Kwiatkowski-LaRouche connection.

Thank you very much for all the material which you posted. I do not have the time to go over it right now, but I will certainly come back to review it closely.

At any rate, I can now say that there is evidence of a link.

16 posted on 05/19/2005 9:27:03 AM PDT by Nicholas Conradin (If you are not disquieted by "One nation under God," try "One nation under Allah.")
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To: Nicholas Conradin; pissant; reagan_fanatic; Bahbah; EagleUSA; geedee; Steve_Seattle; theDentist; ...

You're welcome.

You may also be interested in this thread posted on 3/2/05:

Without Reservation (Another visionary screed from Karen Kwiatkowski)
Military week ^ | 2/05 | karen kwiatkowski
Posted on 03/02/2005 10:14:03 AM EST by pissant
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1354192/posts


17 posted on 05/19/2005 9:41:38 AM PDT by Matchett-PI (The difference between ignorant and stupid is that stupid isn't curable.)
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To: Matchett-PI

Newsweek using International neo-Nazi propaganda ... now THAT is a REAL scoop! Come on MSM .... I'm waiting!


18 posted on 05/19/2005 10:03:13 AM PDT by GOP_1900AD (Stomping on "PC," destroying the Left, and smoking out faux "conservatives" - Take Back The GOP!)
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To: Matchett-PI

For some reason, ever since I was about 17, I've had a deep dislike of LaRouche and everything he stands for. It is a gut level thing, that I really didn't understand until fairly recently. The man is Evil Incarnate (one of several who are).


19 posted on 05/19/2005 10:04:58 AM PDT by GOP_1900AD (Stomping on "PC," destroying the Left, and smoking out faux "conservatives" - Take Back The GOP!)
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To: Matchett-PI
This is so good. . 'typical kudos' to Anne ;^)

Read it earlier/no time to post it. I hope it has it's own. Good to add it to this thread as well.

As for Issikof. . .he deserves more than he will ever get, because of this story. . .again; not just the story; rather because of the gross bias that drove this story into print.

20 posted on 05/19/2005 1:05:26 PM PDT by cricket (.)
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